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The Literary Criticism of Frank Norris (Paperback)
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The Literary Criticism of Frank Norris (Paperback)
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All of American author Frank Norris's significant critical writings
have been compiled in this book, including his articles for the San
Francisco Wave during 1896-1897 and selections from his "Weekly
Letter" column for the Chicago American in 1901. Essays from these
two previously unexploited sources, comprising almost half the
book, reveal certain areas of Norris's thought which heretofore had
been overlooked by scholars. This book was compiled in order to
clarify Frank Norris's literary creed. When Donald Pizer began to
read Norris's uncollected critical articles, he observed concepts
which had been unnoted or misunderstood by his critics. Crediting
this to the inadequate representation of Norris's ideas in the
posthumous The Responsibilities of the Novelist (1903), Pizer
recognized the need for an interpretive and complete edition of
Norris's critical writings. This volume thus fills a noticeable gap
in the field of American literary criticism. By the time of his
death in 1902 Norris had a closed system of critical ideas. This
core of ideas, however, is only peripherally related to the
conventional concept of literary naturalism, which perhaps explains
why critics have gone astray trying to find Zolaesque ideas in
Norris's criticism. Norris's central idea, around which he built an
aesthetic of the novel, was that the best novel combines an
intensely primitivistic subject matter and theme with a highly
sophisticated form. His paradox of sophisticated primitivism
clarifies the vital link between the fiction produced in the 1890s
and that written by Hemingway, Faulkner, and Steinbeck. Norris's
essays deal with many of the literary themes which preoccupy modern
critical theorists. His range of subjects includes the form and
function of the novel; definitions of naturalism, realism, and
romanticism; and the problem of what constitutes an American novel.
His interpretation of commonplace events, his comments on prominent
figures of his day, and his parodies of writers such as Bret Harte,
Stephen Crane, and Rudyard Kipling are characterized by ingenuity
and perception. Through these writings the personality of a man
with well-defined convictions and the ability to expound them
provocatively comes into sharp focus. In a general introduction
Pizer summarizes Norris's critical position and surveys his career
as literary critic. This introduction and the interpretative
introductions preceding each section constitute an illuminating
essay on the literary temper of the period and provide a new
insight into Norris' craft and his literary philosophy.
General
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